There are few things Raman Sehgal, founder and CEO of the award-winning ramarketing, a digital marketing and PR agency, regrets in his life. The one thing he regrets most is not taking the time in his younger years to keep up with his learning. He focused on other things.

“I was starting my business and drinking and doing all the fun things you do in your 20s,” he told me recently in an interview, “My number one advice to people is to never stop learning and growing and progressing.”

The famous duo credits reading and “continuous learning” for their amazing success.

Watch on Forbes:

“If we hadn’t been continuous learners, the record wouldn’t have been as good,” Munger tells author Michael Eisner in his book Working Together: Why Great Partnerships Succeed.

“And we were so extreme about it that we both spent the better part of our days reading, so we could learn more, which is not a common pattern in business.”

What Got You Here Won’t Get You There

It used to be that folks went to school, learned a skill, got a job at a company and retired from said company after 40-plus years. Globalization and technology have changed all that.

Matt Griffel, founder & CEO of One Month, said this in an interview about the changes happening in today’s workplace:

Today, it’s extremely unlikely that a person will remain in their first job for their entire careers. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average person has 10 jobs by age 40. That number will probably be higher for millennials, many of whom don’t plan to stay in their current jobs for more than three years.

Here are a few ways you can incorporate continuous learning into your daily routines.

Forget Formal

There’s a huge misconception among people that the only way to learn is to get a formal education that involves spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to earn a degree.

Here’s the truth: you don’t have to go back to school to always be learning. In fact, some of the world’s most successful business leaders dropped out of school or never went to college. Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg and Richard Branson all became billionaires without earning advanced degrees.

Today, technology allows people anywhere in the world to take classes online, listen to podcasts or read columns like this from the comfort of their office or home. You don’t need to sit in a classroom to learn a valuable skill. If you have access to the Internet, you pretty much have access to the world’s biggest school.

Use tools that allow you to make notes on the fly. Tools like Evernote allow you to sync your digital devices so you can access information anytime, from your anywhere.

Raman Sehgal listens to podcasts while running. If something catches his attention, he’ll stop and record a voice memo that he can refer to later. He makes it easy on himself. He literally learns “on the run.”